Celeron D 331 2.66GHz 1080p Playback

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Durvelle27

Diamond Member
Jun 3, 2012
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I wouldn't really recommend buying a Pentium D, but if you can get one "almost for free", it should be a good option, it would definitely be a huge upgrade from a single core CPU for video...

No not buying one as if I did that I might as well just get a Athlon II x2 and motherboard but I'm going to try and get a Pentium D 915 free if i can find one
 
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NTMBK

Lifer
Nov 14, 2011
10,525
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No not buying one as if I did that I might as well just get a Athlon II x2 and motherboard but I'm going to try and get a Pentium D 915 free if i can find one

Don't know about US prices, but they're dirt cheap on the UK eBay (as in the cost of a trip to the cinema). Might be worth buying at that stupidly low a price. (It'll also save you the hassle of reinstalling Windows!)
 

Durvelle27

Diamond Member
Jun 3, 2012
4,102
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Don't know about US prices, but they're dirt cheap on the UK eBay (as in the cost of a trip to the cinema). Might be worth buying at that stupidly low a price. (It'll also save you the hassle of reinstalling Windows!)

Haven't installed any software yet as i still need a heatsink, RAM, and gpu
 

Durvelle27

Diamond Member
Jun 3, 2012
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Also should i go with Windows 7 or Windows XP i'm kinda pushing towards 7 since its pretty lightweight
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,587
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A lot of advanced video-acceleration stuff seems to need Windows 7.

I had a heck of a time getting decent 1080P MKV playback on a 780G board with a 2.85Ghz dual-core under XP, even with the newest ATI drivers and newest MPC-HC.

All of my problems went away when I finally upgraded that box to Windows 7.
 

Durvelle27

Diamond Member
Jun 3, 2012
4,102
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0
A lot of advanced video-acceleration stuff seems to need Windows 7.

I had a heck of a time getting decent 1080P MKV playback on a 780G board with a 2.85Ghz dual-core under XP, even with the newest ATI drivers and newest MPC-HC.

All of my problems went away when I finally upgraded that box to Windows 7.

thx for the info
 

Durvelle27

Diamond Member
Jun 3, 2012
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Just decided to get a Pentium D 915 to replace the Celeron D 331. Do you guys think it was worth it. Cost me $5
 

NTMBK

Lifer
Nov 14, 2011
10,525
6,050
136
Just decided to get a Pentium D 915 to replace the Celeron D 331. Do you guys think it was worth it. Cost me $5

If it works, then hell yes. You just tripled the performance of your PC for the price of a Big Mac and Fries. If it means you can now use your PC for what you want to use it for, then job done.
 

SPBHM

Diamond Member
Sep 12, 2012
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Just decided to get a Pentium D 915 to replace the Celeron D 331. Do you guys think it was worth it. Cost me $5

in my opinion that's quite good,
the 331 is a lot slower, while I think the Pentium D paired with a newer VGA is pretty decent for basic usage, better than Atom and Brazos (obviously power usage is a lot worse), and a new MB+CPU will cost you probably $60 or higher.
 

Durvelle27

Diamond Member
Jun 3, 2012
4,102
0
0
If it works, then hell yes. You just tripled the performance of your PC for the price of a Big Mac and Fries. If it means you can now use your PC for what you want to use it for, then job done.

yes it works all i need now is the graphics card to complete it
 

Arkaign

Lifer
Oct 27, 2006
20,736
1,379
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Just decided to get a Pentium D 915 to replace the Celeron D 331. Do you guys think it was worth it. Cost me $5

Great deal! Obviously it's not the speed demons that are out now, but you can't argue with that price, and it's hard to justify spending more if your needs are well met by that 915 build. The great thing about the 9xx, and the 915 in particular, is that the lower-clocked Pentium Ds actually ran pretty cool. They only really started to get hot at the 3.2Ghz and above range. 3Ghz and under are surprisingly modest, TDP wise.
 

Durvelle27

Diamond Member
Jun 3, 2012
4,102
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Great deal! Obviously it's not the speed demons that are out now, but you can't argue with that price, and it's hard to justify spending more if your needs are well met by that 915 build. The great thing about the 9xx, and the 915 in particular, is that the lower-clocked Pentium Ds actually ran pretty cool. They only really started to get hot at the 3.2Ghz and above range. 3Ghz and under are surprisingly modest, TDP wise.

Yea i read that. the 9xx series runs cooler than the 8xx series and is overclockable
 

NTMBK

Lifer
Nov 14, 2011
10,525
6,050
136
After giving this advice to you, I caved and bought a faster processor for my parents' ancient P4 computer. It's only an upgrade from 1.7GHz 400FSB to 2.8GHz 533FSB, but it's the highest their motherboard will go- and it only cost me £3.50! Might as well make it a bit more bearable for them to use... (Not to mention that includes the Willamette->Northwood die shrink, so it hardly runs any hotter.)
 

Durvelle27

Diamond Member
Jun 3, 2012
4,102
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0
After giving this advice to you, I caved and bought a faster processor for my parents' ancient P4 computer. It's only an upgrade from 1.7GHz 400FSB to 2.8GHz 533FSB, but it's the highest their motherboard will go- and it only cost me £3.50! Might as well make it a bit more bearable for them to use... (Not to mention that includes the Willamette->Northwood die shrink, so it hardly runs any hotter.)

I also have a P4 2.8GHz and it gets the job done
 

Durvelle27

Diamond Member
Jun 3, 2012
4,102
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It's almost finish got a Pentium D 915 w/HSF and ASUS HD 5450 for $25 so all i need now is some DDR2 RAM preferably 2GB